Main content
Carleton Coon Papers
Notifications
Held at: University of Pennsylvania: Penn Museum Archives [Contact Us]3260 South Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, 19104-6324
This is a finding aid. It is a description of archival material held at the University of Pennsylvania: Penn Museum Archives. Unless otherwise noted, the materials described below are physically available in their reading room, and not digitally available through the web.
Overview and metadata sections
Carleton Stevens Coon was born on June 23, 1904, in Wakefield, Massachusetts. He graduated from the Phillips Academy in 1921, and then went on to graduate Magna Cum Laude from Harvard University in 1925. Coon then received both his Masters degree and Doctorate degree from Harvard University in 1928. He stayed on at Harvard, working his way from instructor to full professor in Anthropology from 1934-1948. Coon took a leave of absence from 1942-1945, during which time he served in the State Special Assistant Department from 1942-43 and then as Major in the United States Army from 1943-45. In 1945, he was awarded the Legion of Merit. Coon was appointed curator of Ethnology at the University Museum and Professor of Anthropology at the University of Pennsylvania in 1948. In 1962, he retired as Curator of Ethnology and Professor of Anthropology and in 1963 became Research Curator in the General Anthropology section, where he remained active until 1977. From 1950 to 1966, he appeared as a regular panel member on the University of Pennsylvania Museum’s television program, “What in the World?,” in which he and the other panelists were challenged to correctly identify artifacts. Often he would perform such a feat blindfolded and characteristically accompanied by an irreverent remark. His field work was extensive, including the excavations of five cave sites in Iran (1949-1955), Afghanistan (1954), Syria and Central Africa (1955), and Chad and Libya (1966-1967). Coon was one of the last of the “general anthropologists;” his interests spanned each of the sub-disciplines of anthropology, including archaeology, physical anthropology, and cultural anthropology. His books include Caravan (1951), The Story of Man (1954), The Seven Caves (1957), The Origin of Races (1962), The Hunting Peoples (1971), and A North Africa Story (1980), as well as his autobiography, Adventures and Discoveries (1981). Coon also installed an exhibit entitled, “The Story of Man,” which chronicled the stages of human evolution, both physical and cultural. Carleton S. Coon died on June 3, 1981 in Gloucester, Massachusetts at the age of 76.
Contained in this collection are mostly records that pertain to Coon’s survey and archaeological excavations during 1949-1955 of five cave sites in Iran: Bisitun in Luristan; Tamtama in Azerbaijan; the Khunik rock shelter in Southern Khorassan; and Belt and Hotu in Gorgan. The last two sites are important because they document Late Paleolithic habitation for Iran, an identification which was supported by the then new technique of radio-carbon dating. The period of habitation for these sites ranges from the Late Paleolithic/Epipaleolithic through the Neolithic. Original field notebooks, field notes, drawings, and correspondence are available for these sites. Also included in this collection are original field notes and correspondence relating to his excavation of the rock shelter Kara Kamar and the cave Kok Jar in Afghanistan in 1954, as well as his excavation of two caves northwest of Palmyra in Syria, Taniat El Beidha and Jerf ’Ajla (the Cave of the Heifer) in 1955. Extremely scant records pertaining to expeditions (fully realized or only proposed) in Bahrain, Libya, South Africa, and Yemen are also present in the collection.
Papers regarding his “Story of Man” (also called “Hall of Man”) exhibit are included as well. These include drafts of label copy, drawings, and plans of the exhibit. Other records relating to Coon’s work done prior to and after these projects are most probably located at the Smithsonian Institution where most of the Coon papers were donated. Additional Coon papers may be found in Expedition Records— Nippur, Iraq (1949–1952) and Administrative Records—African Section.
1950 Anthropological Possibilities in Iran (in Iran and the U.S.A., Vol. 4, No. 1, pp. 48-51, Tehran) 1951 Cave Explorations in Iran 1949 (Museum Monographs, The University Museum, Philadelphia) Caravan (Henry Holt and Co., New York, NY) 1952 Excavations in Hotu Cave, Iran, 1951, A Preliminary Report (Proc. of the American Philosophical Society, Vol. 96, No. 3, pp. 231-249. Philadelphia, PA) The Excavations at Hotu Cave (Transactions of the NY Academy of Sciences, Ser. II, Vol. 14, No. 4, Feb. 1952, pp. 179-180. New York, NY) The Impact of the West on Middle Eastern Social Institutions (Proc. of the Academy of Political Science, Vol. 24, No. 4, pp. 443-466. New York, NY) 1953 Our Mediterranean Heritage—Islamic Tradition (Saturday Review, Vol. 36, October, pp. 18-19) “Social Evolution in the Middle East,” for Evolution in the Middle East, a symposium. Middle East Institute. Washington, D.C. 1954 The Story of Man (Alfred A. Knopf and Co., New York) 1955 The Nomads (in “Social Forces in the Middle East,” edited by Sidney Fisher, Cornell University Press, Chap. 2, pp. 23-42) “Radio-Carbon Dates for Kara Kamar, Afghanistan” (University of Pennsylvania II with Elizabeth K. Ralph, Science, Nov. 11, 1955, Vol. 122, pp. 921-922) 1956 “The Desert and the Land” (in Mid-East: World Center, edited by Nanda Anshen, Science and Culture Series, Vol. VII, Harper and Bros., pp. 76-89) Antrubulujiyya li’l-Arab (Anthropology for Arabs) (in al-thakafat al-islamiyyat wa al-Hayat al-Mu asirat, Franklin Publication, NY and Cairo, pp. 289-301) 1957 The Seven Caves: Archaeological Explorations in the Middle East (Knopf, NY) 1981 Adventures and Discoveries: The Autobiography of Carleton S. Coon (Prentice Hall, Inc., Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey)
People
Subject
- Publisher
- University of Pennsylvania: Penn Museum Archives
- Finding Aid Author
- Finding aid prepared by M. Malta
- Finding Aid Date
- 1/14/2015